Benny at White Light

When magic awakens within Benny and she turns mystik, she is thrown out of her house and stumbles into an opportunity to go to White Light, the most prestigious magic school in the multiverse. There she struggles to acclimatize to a new world and her place in it and becomes involved in trying to bring concepts like equal rights to a naturally hierarchical culture. More

The Institute of White Light Energy Theory or White Light is a magical boarding high school drawing it's student body from across the multiverse. In this multidimensional web of worlds The Family can trace their family tree back to when the sentient force of creation incarnated itself in the form of the first two people (who they call the Mother and Father) so that it might interact with the world it created. White Light is theirs but they will allow less powerful people access as long as they are interesting or at least unobtrusive. Benny is easily one, but never the other. When she insists on being very vocal with her opinions of right and wrong will she be expelled, killed. Or can her relentlessly entertaining personality and friends in the Family mean she will be humored or possibly listened to?

I'm loud and silly. I wear my heart on my sleeve and my spleen on my raincoat. I look like everyone else you know. (If we're going to have a successful revolution, we have to look like them.)I've been writing since I was nine. I finished my first book at seventeen and discovered fanfic in 11/2013, a discovery that gave my writing the incomparable boon of immediate fan feedback.

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Reviews

Review by:
Emile Fetterbump
on March 04, 2012 :
This sophmore effort is an entertaining and exciting take on the 'magical high school' subgenre. It explores the idea of an adolescent exploring her sexual orientation (in a PG-13 manner) without feeling the need to come to a conclusion. The pacing is still a little uneven, though better than the author's first effort. And the last quarter of the book seems to be rushing for the finish line. All in all a fun read, which would appeal to anyone who loves urban fantasy and might especially appeal to young women who can relate personally to the heroine's journey.
(reviewed the day of purchase)